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Liberties Union.
Originally posted by the ACLU at https://www.aclu.org/news/free-speech/lessons-learned-from-our-classroom-censorship-win-against-floridas-stop-w-o-k-e-act.
Lessons Learned
from Our Classroom Censorship Win Against Florida’s Stop W.O.K.E. Act
Here’s what the
judge’s order could mean for challenges to censorship efforts nationwide.
Leah Watson,
Senior Staff
Attorney,
ACLU's Racial Justice
Program
November 29, 2022
Earlier this month, a federal judge blocked Florida from
enforcing the Stop Wrongs Against Our Kids Act (Stop W.O.K.E. Act) in the
state’s colleges and universities. Florida is just one of over a dozen states
across the country that have passed laws censoring discussions around race and
gender in the classroom, and this is the first time a court has ruled that this
type of classroom censorship law is unconstitutional. This preliminary victory
could present an opportunity to bolster similar challenges to classroom
censorship efforts nationwide.
The order came in a lawsuit we filed on behalf of seven
instructors and one student in colleges and universities across Florida to
challenge the Stop W.O.K.E. Act, which limits the ways concepts related to
systemic racism and sex discrimination can be discussed in teaching or
conducting training in workplaces or schools. The concepts were parroted from
Executive Order 13950, issued by then President Trump and rescinded by
President Biden, and have been incorporated in similar classroom censorship
laws introduced and passed in other states.
We argued the law violated the First and Fourteenth
Amendments because it restricts instructors from teaching and students from
learning certain viewpoints, the law is unconstitutionally vague, and it
intentionally discriminates against Black instructors and students. The order
describes the law as “positively dystopian,” and makes the following key
findings that could be leveraged to challenge similar classroom censorship
legislation in other states:
1) Instruction in higher education is protected by the
First Amendment and academic freedom.
In response to our lawsuit, Florida terrifyingly asserted
that it had the absolute right to control what educators can teach because it
is government speech, noting that university professors are public employees.
This claim contradicts the longstanding recognition that academic freedom is a
“special concern” of the First Amendment. In the university setting, this means
the First Amendment protects universities’ and professors’ right to make
teaching choices without government censorship targeting disfavored viewpoints.
The state’s position that university instructors are “simply the state’s
mouthpieces” could have dangerous consequences, including allowing the state to
literally dictate lessons and have educators simply read from a script. The
order held that educators’ First Amendment right to teach concepts prohibited
by the Stop W.O.K.E. Act far outweighed the state’s interest in indoctrinating
students to its preferred viewpoint.
2) University students have their own First Amendment
right to receive information — including concepts related to racism and sexism
prohibited by the Stop W.O.K.E. Act.
The order recognized that the First Amendment protects not
only the right to speak, but also the right to receive information. In the higher
education context, the court held that the scope of a student’s First Amendment
right to receive information corresponds to the instructors’ First Amendment
right to share.
3) Like the Stop W.O.K.E. Act, other classroom censorship
laws are vulnerable to challenge as unconstitutional, viewpoint-based
restrictions.
The Stop W.O.K.E. Act limited instruction to viewpoints that
the legislature agreed with, even when those viewpoints contradict research,
academic scholarship, and foundational understandings of academic disciplines.
Based on their academic training and research, our professor plaintiffs teach
that some people are disadvantaged in America, and particularly in the criminal
legal system, due to their race; describe the existence of “white privilege”
and its impact in society; and advocate for affirmative action to ensure campus
diversity. The Stop W.O.K.E. Act forced our professor plaintiffs to choose
between teaching these evidence-supported concepts, which are foundational in
their field, or censoring their viewpoints to comply with the law. As Judge
Mark Walker noted, “[t]he law officially bans professors from expressing
disfavored viewpoints in university classrooms while permitting unfettered
expression of the opposite viewpoints,” in contravention of the First
Amendment.
4) The Stop W.O.K.E. Act was unconstitutionally vague on
various grounds.
First, the eight concepts prohibited by the law are vague.
The order found that some of the prohibited concepts were impossible to
interpret within the context of university instruction because of its
complicated wording or ambiguous meaning. For example, the law permits
discussion of these concepts if presented in an objective manner and without
endorsement. However, the state argued that any promotion of the prohibited
concepts would violate the law, so the state’s interpretation of “objectivity”
was ambiguous because it only permits educators to present the concepts in a
negative light. The court noted that professors could not organize a debate about
the merits of affirmative action because any speaker that argued in favor of
affirmative action would violate the Stop W.O.K.E. Act. The court also
recognized that the lack of explicit standards about “objectivity” would allow
arbitrary, and potentially discriminatory, enforcement of the law.
5) The state’s attempts to justify the censorship as an
antidiscrimination effort to reduce racism was a failed effort.
“Defendants try to dress up the State of Florida’s interest
as a public employer and educator as prohibiting discrimination in university
classrooms, but this does not give defendants a safe harbor in which to enforce
viewpoint-based restrictions targeting protected speech,” wrote Judge Walker.
Arguing that the Stop W.O.K.E. Act is an anti-discrimination law is a red
herring. To be clear, education gag orders do not serve antidiscrimination
purposes. They are thinly veiled speech restrictions without any attempt to
limit discriminatory actions.
We are currently challenging classroom censorship laws in
Florida, Oklahoma, and New Hampshire, and hope these findings will bolster
these challenges and censorship efforts across the nation. We will not stop
fighting for students’ and educators’ right to teach and learn free from state
censorship and discrimination.